HC&D, LLC v. Cashman Equipment Corp.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedSeptember 29, 2023
Docket1:22-cv-10224
StatusUnknown

This text of HC&D, LLC v. Cashman Equipment Corp. (HC&D, LLC v. Cashman Equipment Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
HC&D, LLC v. Cashman Equipment Corp., (D. Mass. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

HC&D, LLC, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) CIVIL ACTION NO. ) 22-10224-DPW PRECISION NDT & CONSULTING, LLC, ) and CASHMAN EQUIPMENT CORP., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER REGARDING SEVERANCE AND TRANSFER September 29, 2023 TABLE OF CONTENTS

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND.......................................... 5 A. The Parties ............................................. 5 B. The Purchase Agreement .................................. 6 C. The Gauging Report ...................................... 7 II. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND...................................... 9 III. ANALYSIS................................................. 11 A. Personal Jurisdiction .................................. 12 B. The Transfer Mechanism ................................. 19 C. Private and Public Transfer Interests .................. 24 D. Transfer and the Forum-Selection Clause ................ 28 1. Forum Selection Clause in Agreement Between HC&D and Cashman ............................................... 33 2. Private and Public Interests Relevant to Precision .... 33 3. Severance of Precision’s Claims ....................... 34 4. Efficiency and Precision’s Private Interests .......... 35 5. Conclusion ............................................ 36 IV. CONCLUSION................................................ 38 This dispute among three sophisticated commercial entities — HC&D, LLC (“HC&D”), Cashman Equipment Corp. (“Cashman”), and Precision NDT & Consulting, LLC (“Precision”) — surfaces from turmoil caused by the sale of expensive maritime equipment: a freight barge (the “Barge”). Plaintiff HC&D and Defendant Cashman were the two signatories to the actual Purchase and Sale Agreement (“Purchase Agreement”) for the Barge. The Purchase

Agreement contained a forum-selection clause requiring disputes “arising” under the agreement to be litigated in Massachusetts. Precision, a company that performed work for Cashman prior to the execution of the Purchase Agreement, was also named by HC&D as a defendant in this case. After Precision raised issues pertaining to this court’s personal jurisdiction over it, HC&D reversed its initial strategic choice to file in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts and moved to transfer the case in its entirety to the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana. When initiating this litigation, HC&D had available at

least two alternatives. First, HC&D could have, as it did, file a lawsuit in Massachusetts where it would be met, as it was, with a motion to dismiss based on this court’s lack of personal jurisdiction over co-defendant Precision. Alternatively, HC&D could have filed two separate, but very similar, lawsuits respectively against each of the co-defendants — Cashman in Massachusetts and Precision in Louisiana — and pursued the two separate suits simultaneously, thus severing what was conceived as one dispute arising under the Purchase Agreement into two cases in two different districts. In an electronic order on March 31, 2023, following the parties’ supplemental memorandum regarding Precision’s motion to transfer the entire case to the Western District of Louisiana, I

granted Precision’s motion to transfer and promised a Memorandum providing directions for the transfer procedure. Meanwhile and well after the promised transfer Memorandum was expected to issue, I continued to reflect on the proper form transfer should take.1 This in turn has caused me to reconsider my electronic

1 By the luck of the draw, I have over the past several years been called upon to rule on the question of transfer when the court does not have jurisdiction over all defendants. My written opinions in such cases have resolved the transfer question by ordering transfer of the case to a district having jurisdiction over all parties. See Ferris v. Darrell, No. 18- cv-10204-DPW, 2020 WL 4431763 (D. Mass. July 13, 2020); TargetSmart Holdings, LLC v. GHP Advisors, LLC, 366 F. Supp. 3d 195 (D. Mass. 2019). As reported in Lewis v. Hill, No. 19-cv- 12500-DPW, 2023 WL 4706575, at *23 n.15 (D. Mass. July 24, 2023), where the subsequent history of those cases is recounted, those transfers provided more manageable, expeditious and inexpensive means of proceeding in the face of reluctant and recalcitrant litigants and their counsel. In Lewis, I followed a similar protocol, after full consideration of the implications of transfer for parties having disparate resources who “carefully and strategically avoided asking for transfer.” Lewis, at *1. By contrast, as will appear in this Memorandum, severance of the claims of defendants followed by transfer of only the defendant over whom this district does not have jurisdiction, appears the more manageable, expeditious and inexpensive course when confronted with the collection of reluctant and recalcitrant litigants in this case. order that this case be transferred to the Western District of Louisiana in its entirety. Having now reconsidered my earlier disposition toward keeping the claims against both defendants bundled together in a single jurisdiction, I have concluded that HC&D should not pursue this case, in its entirety, in Massachusetts. The salience of the forum-selection clause in a Purchase Agreement

for a maritime vessel as a distinctive fact affecting my determination, counsels that I balance the competing interests by transferring only HC&D’s claims against Precision to the Western District of Louisiana while maintaining jurisdiction over its claims against Cashman in Massachusetts. More fundamentally, the severance of the respective claims separately alleged against the two defendants would — as a pragmatic approach and in a practical manner — best promote the interests of justice by its prospect for making resolution of the two severed cases more manageable, expeditious and inexpensive. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND A. The Parties Plaintiff HC&D is a limited liability company organized under the laws of the State of Hawaii with a principal place of business in Honolulu, Hawaii. All members of this limited liability company are citizens of Hawaii. HC&D represents that it is one of the main producers of concrete in Hawaii and intended to purchase the Barge in order to transport concrete between the Hawaiian Islands. Defendant Cashman is a marine construction corporation organized under the laws of Massachusetts with a principal place of business in Braintree, Massachusetts. In addition, as discussed more fully below, HC&D asserts in its filings, and Cashman does not dispute, that Cashman conducts a meaningful

amount of business in the state of Louisiana and has a business address there. Defendant Precision is a limited liability company organized under the laws of Louisiana with an office in Patterson, Louisiana. All members of this limited liability company are citizens of Louisiana. Precision is an American Bureau of Shipping (“ABS”) certified hull inspection company that conducts visual inspections of vessels like the barge at issue. B. The Purchase Agreement In September 2020, HC&D and Cashman entered into the

Purchase Agreement under which Cashman sold the Barge to HC&D for $1,985,500.2 The Purchase Agreement has both a forum- selection clause and a choice of law clause pointed toward the

2 HC&D alleges a purchase price of $1,985,500 [Dkt. No. 4 ¶ 7], though the Purchase Agreement, itself, lists a price of $1,900,000. [Dkt. No. 4-1 at ¶ 1] The source of the $85,500 discrepancy is unclear but is, in any event, immaterial for purposes of this Memorandum.

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HC&D, LLC v. Cashman Equipment Corp., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hcd-llc-v-cashman-equipment-corp-mad-2023.